Single-arm, open-label, multicentre first in human study to evaluate the safety and performance of dural sealant patch in reducing CSF leakage following elective cranial surgery: The ENCASE trial

Publication date

2021-07-28

Authors

van Doormaal, Tristan P CORCID 0000-0002-6299-3859ISNI 0000000389942725
Germans, Menno R.
Sie, Mariska
Brouwers, H. Bart
Carlson, Andrew
Dankbaar, Jan WillemISNI 0000000392895296
Fierstra, Jorn
Depauw, Paul
Robe, Pierre AORCID 0000-0001-7845-6196
Regli, Luca

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc

Abstract

Objective The dural sealant patch (DSP) is designed for watertight dural closure after cranial surgery. The goal of this study is to assess, for the first time, safety and performance of the DSP as a means of reducing cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage in patients undergoing elective cranial intradural surgery with a dural closure procedure. Design First in human, open-label, single-arm, multicentre study with 360-day (12 months) follow-up. Setting Three large tertiary reference neurosurgical centres, two in the Netherlands and one in Switzerland. Participants Forty patients undergoing elective cranial neurosurgical procedures, stratified into 34 supratentorial and six infratentorial trepanations. Intervention Each patient received one DSP after cranial surgery and closure of the dura mater with sutures. Outcome measures Primary composite endpoint was occurrence of one of the following events: postoperative percutaneous CSF leakage, intraoperative leakage at 20 cm H 2 O positive end-expiratory pressure or postoperative wound infection. Overall success was defined as achieving the primary endpoint in no more than two patients. Secondary endpoints were device-related serious adverse events or adverse events (AEs), pseudomeningocele and thickness of dura+DSP. Additional endpoints were reoperation in 30 days and user satisfaction. Results No patients met the primary endpoint. No device-related (serious) AEs were observed. There were two incidences of self-limiting pseudomeningocele as confirmed on MRI. Thickness of dura and DSP were (mean±SD) 3.5 mm±2.0 at day 7 and 2.1 mm±1.2 at day 90. No patients were reoperated within 30 days. Users reported a satisfactory design and intuitive application. Conclusions DSP, later officially named Liqoseal, is a safe and potentially efficacious device for reducing CSF leakage after intracranial surgery, with favourable clinical handling characteristics. A randomised controlled trial is needed to assess Liqoseal efficacy against the best current practice for reducing postoperative CSF leakage. Trial registration number NCT03566602.

Keywords

clinical trials, neurosurgery, General Medicine

Citation

Van Doormaal, T, Germans, M R, Sie, M, Brouwers, B, Carlson, A, Dankbaar, J W, Fierstra, J, Depauw, P, Robe, P & Regli, L 2021, 'Single-arm, open-label, multicentre first in human study to evaluate the safety and performance of dural sealant patch in reducing CSF leakage following elective cranial surgery : The ENCASE trial', BMJ Open, vol. 11, no. 7, e049098, pp. 1-6. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-049098